Stronger Wilma speeds toward Florida
KEY WEST, Fla., Monday (Reuters) Wilma strengthened back to a major
Category 3 hurricane as it raced toward Florida after devastating
Mexico's Caribbean resorts with floods and winds that smashed thousands
of homes and killed seven people.
While Wilma's outer fringes began to pelt Florida, dazed tourists
waded through a knee-deep flood in the Mexican beach resort of Cancun to
seek food and water after three nights in shelters without electricity.
At one point the most intense hurricane recorded in the Atlantic
basin, Wilma weakened as it hammered Mexico's Yucatan Peninsula for
three days, but strengthened again to carry 115- mph (185-kph) winds
toward the Florida Keys, where storm-weary residents largely ignored
evacuation orders.
"We're just hoping that the waters don't rise and the bridges don't
fail," said Key West real estate agent Suzanne Washburn.Emergency
managers estimated no more than 7 percent of the Keys' 80,000 residents
evacuated, despite fears they could be stranded if Wilma washed out
parts of the Overseas Highway, the only road connecting the 110-mile
(175-km) island chain to mainland Florida. The last city evacuation bus
left Key West on Sunday morning with only the driver and one passenger.
Wilma was expected to hit southwest Florida by daybreak and then
"take off like a rocket headed out over the Atlantic," hurricane center
Director Max Mayfield said.
Wilma was a large and dangerous Category 3 on the five-step Saffir-Simpson
scale of hurricane intensity and forecasters said it was unlikely to
weaken until after it crossed over the southwest Florida coast.
Wilma could push a storm surge of up to 17 feet (5 metres) over
southwest Florida. That would exceed the surge of last year's Hurricane
Charley, then the second costliest hurricane in U.S. history with more
than $15 billion in damage.
Wilma was expected to race across southern Florida and over the
Miami, Fort Lauderdale and Palm Beach area, the state's most populous
region with about 5 million people.
Shelters opened and residents of mobile homes and low-lying areas
were told to leave. Wilma did heavy damage in Mexico, where the howling
winds and torrential rain gutted homes, hotels and stores all along the
"Maya Riviera," a strip of tropical coastline that draws millions of
tourists to its beaches, coral-filled seas and Mayan ruins.
The resort city of Cancun lay gutted after Wilma blew out windows,
tore through shops and left hotel lobbies knee-deep in water and strewn
with glass, plaster and other debris. Cozumel island was severely
flooded and battered beyond recognition.
"The sea has broken everything," said Jose Mariscal, from Spain,
staying in a hotel lobby with staff and their families.
Four people were killed on Cozumel, and three others on the mainland,
making Wilma's overall death toll at least 17 after mudslides killed 10
people in Haiti last week.
In the Playa del Carmen resort, trees and electrical poles lay in the
streets, and many buildings were damaged.
Western Cuba was buffeted by 86-mph (138-kph) wind gusts that howled
through the empty streets of Havana, knocking down lampposts and
smashing some windows out of tall buildings. The city's 2 million
inhabitants hunkered down in the dark, listening to battery-powered
radios after authorities cut power to prevent electrical accidents. |